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BN- When Rod Moore sits down with inmates, some of whom are coming off drugs or wearing their prison greens for the first time, he knows ...

BN- When Rod Moore sits down with inmates, some of whom are coming off drugs or wearing their prison greens for the first time, he knows better than most how they are feeling.

Growing up in a broken home, the Anglican priest ended up on Sydney's streets at 15.

He developed a fierce drug addiction – mainly heroin but he didn't discriminate – and rode with an outlaw motorcycle gang.

"I had all my tattoos removed when I left the club back in 1975," he said as he pointed to faint scaring on his arms. "In those days you could leave a club but you can't now."

It is hard to imagine today that, Reverend Moore, a bespectacled, softly spoken 62-year-old man, did his own stint in the old Parramatta prison years ago.

But it is this life experience and absence of judgment that has seen NSW Corrective Services' head prison chaplain help many inmates over the course of his lengthy career.

"When I first started in jails 23 years ago, I would go into church services and inmates would ask me about something and I would tell them a little bit of my story," he said from Silverwater's Correctional Complex. "That would give me a good in and a connection.

"But after a while I stopped telling the story as some people would say, 'you know the chaplain Rod used to be a biker'.

"It doesn't take long when you are sitting with an inmate – whether they are a biker or a drug addict or whatever – when they start sharing their story or their addiction, they pretty quickly know you know what it is like."

NSW has the largest number of prison chaplains in the country, with 44 full-time and 40 part-time chaplains providing support to inmates regardless of religious denominations.

From Saturday up to 300 prison chaplains from around the world – including the United States with its high incarceration rates and the over crowded cells in Africa – will gather for the International Prison Chaplain Conference in Lane Cove.

They will share their experiences of providing support to inmates and jail staff grappling with grief, stress, sickness and loss around the world.

Steve House, a former Kings Cross doorman who left the golden mile and found God, has been helping inmates at the Metropolitan Reception and Remand Centre (MRRC) since 2004.

"[We talk about] everything from where the body is, where the money is buried," he joked.